Automatic sleep scoring in normals and in individuals with neurodegenerative disorders according to new international sleep scoring criteria

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Automatic sleep scoring in normals and in individuals with neurodegenerative disorders according to new international sleep scoring criteria. / Jensen, Peter S; Sorensen, Helge B D; Jennum, Poul; Leonthin, Helle.

In: Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology, Vol. 27, No. 4, 01.08.2010, p. 296-302.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Jensen, PS, Sorensen, HBD, Jennum, P & Leonthin, H 2010, 'Automatic sleep scoring in normals and in individuals with neurodegenerative disorders according to new international sleep scoring criteria', Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology, vol. 27, no. 4, pp. 296-302. https://doi.org/10.1097/WNP.0b013e3181eaad4b

APA

Jensen, P. S., Sorensen, H. B. D., Jennum, P., & Leonthin, H. (2010). Automatic sleep scoring in normals and in individuals with neurodegenerative disorders according to new international sleep scoring criteria. Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology, 27(4), 296-302. https://doi.org/10.1097/WNP.0b013e3181eaad4b

Vancouver

Jensen PS, Sorensen HBD, Jennum P, Leonthin H. Automatic sleep scoring in normals and in individuals with neurodegenerative disorders according to new international sleep scoring criteria. Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology. 2010 Aug 1;27(4):296-302. https://doi.org/10.1097/WNP.0b013e3181eaad4b

Author

Jensen, Peter S ; Sorensen, Helge B D ; Jennum, Poul ; Leonthin, Helle. / Automatic sleep scoring in normals and in individuals with neurodegenerative disorders according to new international sleep scoring criteria. In: Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology. 2010 ; Vol. 27, No. 4. pp. 296-302.

Bibtex

@article{cd20d4cd6b6544b0a14c815ea80bcb56,
title = "Automatic sleep scoring in normals and in individuals with neurodegenerative disorders according to new international sleep scoring criteria",
abstract = "The aim of this study was to develop a fully automatic sleep scoring algorithm on the basis of a reproduction of new international sleep scoring criteria from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. A biomedical signal processing algorithm was developed, allowing for automatic sleep depth quantification of routine polysomnographic recordings through feature extraction, supervised probabilistic Bayesian classification, and heuristic rule-based smoothing. The performance of the algorithm was tested using 28 manually classified day-night polysomnograms from 18 normal subjects and 10 patients with Parkinson disease or multiple system atrophy. This led to quantification of automatic versus manual epoch-by-epoch agreement rates for both normals and abnormals. Resulting average agreement rates were 87.7% (Cohen's Kappa: 0.79) and 68.2% (Cohen's Kappa: 0.26) in the normal and abnormal group, respectively. Based on an observed reliability of the manual scorer of 92.5% (Cohen's Kappa: 0.87) in the normal group and 85.3% (Cohen's Kappa: 0.73) in the abnormal group, this study concluded that although the developed algorithm was capable of scoring normal sleep with an accuracy around the manual interscorer reliability, it failed in accurately scoring abnormal sleep as encountered for the Parkinson disease/multiple system atrophy patients.",
author = "Jensen, {Peter S} and Sorensen, {Helge B D} and Poul Jennum and Helle Leonthin",
year = "2010",
month = aug,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1097/WNP.0b013e3181eaad4b",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "296--302",
journal = "Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology",
issn = "0736-0258",
publisher = "Lippincott Williams & Wilkins",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Automatic sleep scoring in normals and in individuals with neurodegenerative disorders according to new international sleep scoring criteria

AU - Jensen, Peter S

AU - Sorensen, Helge B D

AU - Jennum, Poul

AU - Leonthin, Helle

PY - 2010/8/1

Y1 - 2010/8/1

N2 - The aim of this study was to develop a fully automatic sleep scoring algorithm on the basis of a reproduction of new international sleep scoring criteria from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. A biomedical signal processing algorithm was developed, allowing for automatic sleep depth quantification of routine polysomnographic recordings through feature extraction, supervised probabilistic Bayesian classification, and heuristic rule-based smoothing. The performance of the algorithm was tested using 28 manually classified day-night polysomnograms from 18 normal subjects and 10 patients with Parkinson disease or multiple system atrophy. This led to quantification of automatic versus manual epoch-by-epoch agreement rates for both normals and abnormals. Resulting average agreement rates were 87.7% (Cohen's Kappa: 0.79) and 68.2% (Cohen's Kappa: 0.26) in the normal and abnormal group, respectively. Based on an observed reliability of the manual scorer of 92.5% (Cohen's Kappa: 0.87) in the normal group and 85.3% (Cohen's Kappa: 0.73) in the abnormal group, this study concluded that although the developed algorithm was capable of scoring normal sleep with an accuracy around the manual interscorer reliability, it failed in accurately scoring abnormal sleep as encountered for the Parkinson disease/multiple system atrophy patients.

AB - The aim of this study was to develop a fully automatic sleep scoring algorithm on the basis of a reproduction of new international sleep scoring criteria from the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. A biomedical signal processing algorithm was developed, allowing for automatic sleep depth quantification of routine polysomnographic recordings through feature extraction, supervised probabilistic Bayesian classification, and heuristic rule-based smoothing. The performance of the algorithm was tested using 28 manually classified day-night polysomnograms from 18 normal subjects and 10 patients with Parkinson disease or multiple system atrophy. This led to quantification of automatic versus manual epoch-by-epoch agreement rates for both normals and abnormals. Resulting average agreement rates were 87.7% (Cohen's Kappa: 0.79) and 68.2% (Cohen's Kappa: 0.26) in the normal and abnormal group, respectively. Based on an observed reliability of the manual scorer of 92.5% (Cohen's Kappa: 0.87) in the normal group and 85.3% (Cohen's Kappa: 0.73) in the abnormal group, this study concluded that although the developed algorithm was capable of scoring normal sleep with an accuracy around the manual interscorer reliability, it failed in accurately scoring abnormal sleep as encountered for the Parkinson disease/multiple system atrophy patients.

U2 - 10.1097/WNP.0b013e3181eaad4b

DO - 10.1097/WNP.0b013e3181eaad4b

M3 - Journal article

VL - 27

SP - 296

EP - 302

JO - Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology

JF - Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology

SN - 0736-0258

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 34190249